Discover the Lanier's Oak Tree and Historical Marker in Brunswick Georgia - Under this tree during the 1870s, GA poet Sidney Lanier stood and, viewing the landscape, was inspired to write "The Marshes of Glynn," considered to be his finest poetry. Stay and Play in GA!

Lanier's Oak Marker Inscription Reads:
LANIER'S OAKduring his visits to Brunswick in the 1870's Sidney Lanier, Georgia's greatest poet, frequently sat beneath this live oak tree and look out over "a world of marsh that borders a world of sea." Here he received the inspoiration which resulted in some of his finest poems.

Was a guest in this home on many occasions in the 1870's. It was then the residence of his wife's brother, Henry C. Day. On these visits Lanier became acquainted with "THE MARSHES OF GLYNN" which he immortalized.

In Brunswick, the oak tree where Sidney Lanier once relaxed by the edge of the marsh was soon dubbed Lanier's Oak. Today, this tree may be seen on Highway 17, north of the foot of Gloucester Street, and includes a marker that commemorates Lanier.

The Marshes of Glynn became a highly acclaimed poem and Sidney Lanier made plans to write a series of poems entitled Hymns of the Marshes. Ultimately though, only a few in the series were composed. Throughout the 1900s children living in Georgia were required to memorize the poem by heart and real estate proprietor Bill Brown explains that it was once mandatory for all pupils at Glynn Academy High School to learn the poem.

The Georgia poet Sidney Lanier was born in Macon, Georgia. He was a graduate from Oglethorpe University. He planeed to go to graduate school in Germany, but joined the Confederates in the Civil War instead. He was captured and spent four years in a Union prison. Both his health and his wealth were ruined by the Civil War.

In 1874 he visited with relatives in Brunswick to regain his health. He would rest under a great live oak tree overlooking the salt marshes he made famous in his Marshes of Glynn. Lanier's Oak is located in the median of US 17 about 0.4 miles south of the F. J. Torras Causeway leading to St. Simons. The place must have done something good for Lanier because he went on to lecture on English literature at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, Maryland. He died in 1881.

Contact, Address and Map

Phone: 912-265-0620 or toll free 800-933-2627
- Location Marker is on Ocean Highway (U.S. 17) 0.4 miles south of St Simons Island Causeway, in the median in Brunswick Georgia